I have a similar issue.  With F41 and F42 my ext4 partitions are not automounted as they were in F40. The only partitions which are automounted are NTFS and btrfs.  F41 and F42 see the drives.  I'm also running the mate desktop.

Here is what I see in /var/log/messages

This is an Ext4 drive

Jul 25 10:02:31 caseyjones.homenet192-168-10.com kernel: sd 10:0:0:0: [sdj] 7814037167 512-byte logical blocks: (4.00 TB/3.64 TiB) Jul 25 10:02:31 caseyjones.homenet192-168-10.com kernel: sd 10:0:0:0: [sdj] 4096-byte physical blocks Jul 25 10:02:31 caseyjones.homenet192-168-10.com kernel: sd 10:0:0:0: [sdj] Write Protect is off Jul 25 10:02:31 caseyjones.homenet192-168-10.com kernel: sd 10:0:0:0: [sdj] Write cache: enabled, read cache: enabled, doesn't support DPO or FUA Jul 25 10:02:31 caseyjones.homenet192-168-10.com kernel: sd 10:0:0:0: [sdj] Preferred minimum I/O size 4096 bytes Jul 25 10:02:31 caseyjones.homenet192-168-10.com kernel: sd 10:0:0:0: [sdj] Optimal transfer size 33553920 bytes not a multiple of preferred minimum block size (4096 bytes)
Jul 25 10:02:31 caseyjones.homenet192-168-10.com kernel:  sdj: sdj1
Jul 25 10:02:31 caseyjones.homenet192-168-10.com kernel: sd 10:0:0:0: [sdj] Attached SCSI disk Jul 25 10:02:31 caseyjones.homenet192-168-10.com boltd[1249]: probing: started [1000] Jul 25 10:02:31 caseyjones kernel: sd 10:0:0:0: [sdj] 7814037167 512-byte logical blocks: (4.00 TB/3.64 TiB) Jul 25 10:02:31 caseyjones kernel: sd 10:0:0:0: [sdj] 4096-byte physical blocks
Jul 25 10:02:31 caseyjones kernel: sd 10:0:0:0: [sdj] Write Protect is off
Jul 25 10:02:31 caseyjones kernel: sd 10:0:0:0: [sdj] Write cache: enabled, read cache: enabled, doesn't support DPO or FUA Jul 25 10:02:31 caseyjones kernel: sd 10:0:0:0: [sdj] Preferred minimum I/O size 4096 bytes Jul 25 10:02:31 caseyjones kernel: sd 10:0:0:0: [sdj] Optimal transfer size 33553920 bytes not a multiple of preferred minimum block size (4096 bytes)
Jul 25 10:02:31 caseyjones kernel: sdj: sdj1
Jul 25 10:02:31 caseyjones kernel: sd 10:0:0:0: [sdj] Attached SCSI disk

This is an NTFS drive:

Jul 25 10:04:54 caseyjones kernel: sd 5:0:0:0: [sde] Write Protect is off
Jul 25 10:04:54 caseyjones.homenet192-168-10.com kernel: sd 5:0:0:0: [sde] 4096-byte physical blocks Jul 25 10:04:54 caseyjones.homenet192-168-10.com kernel: sd 5:0:0:0: [sde] Write Protect is off Jul 25 10:04:54 caseyjones.homenet192-168-10.com kernel: sd 5:0:0:0: [sde] Write cache: enabled, read cache: enabled, doesn't support DPO or FUA Jul 25 10:04:54 caseyjones.homenet192-168-10.com kernel: sd 5:0:0:0: [sde] Preferred minimum I/O size 4096 bytes Jul 25 10:04:54 caseyjones.homenet192-168-10.com kernel: sd 5:0:0:0: [sde] Optimal transfer size 33553920 bytes not a multiple of preferred minimum block size (4096 bytes) Jul 25 10:04:54 caseyjones kernel: sd 5:0:0:0: [sde] Write cache: enabled, read cache: enabled, doesn't support DPO or FUA Jul 25 10:04:54 caseyjones kernel: sd 5:0:0:0: [sde] Preferred minimum I/O size 4096 bytes Jul 25 10:04:54 caseyjones kernel: sd 5:0:0:0: [sde] Optimal transfer size 33553920 bytes not a multiple of preferred minimum block size (4096 bytes)
Jul 25 10:04:55 caseyjones kernel: sde: sde1 sde2
Jul 25 10:04:55 caseyjones.homenet192-168-10.com kernel:  sde: sde1 sde2
Jul 25 10:04:55 caseyjones.homenet192-168-10.com kernel: sd 5:0:0:0: [sde] Attached SCSI disk
Jul 25 10:04:55 caseyjones kernel: sd 5:0:0:0: [sde] Attached SCSI disk

Jul 25 10:05:06 caseyjones ntfs-3g[1315889]: Mounted /dev/sde2 (Read-Write, label "DISPICS", NTFS 3.1) Jul 25 10:05:06 caseyjones ntfs-3g[1315889]: Cmdline options: rw,uhelper=udisks2,nodev,nosuid,uid=1000,gid=1001,windows_names Jul 25 10:05:06 caseyjones ntfs-3g[1315889]: Mount options: uhelper=udisks2,nodev,nosuid,allow_other,nonempty,relatime,rw,default_permissions,fsname=/dev/sde2,blkdev,blksize=4096 Jul 25 10:05:06 caseyjones ntfs-3g[1315889]: Global ownership and permissions enforced, configuration type 7 Jul 25 10:05:06 caseyjones udisksd[1062]: Mounted /dev/sde2 at /run/media/pgaltieri/DISPICS on behalf of uid 1000 Jul 25 10:05:06 caseyjones.homenet192-168-10.com ntfs-3g[1315889]: Version 2022.10.3 integrated FUSE 28 Jul 25 10:05:06 caseyjones.homenet192-168-10.com ntfs-3g[1315889]: Mounted /dev/sde2 (Read-Write, label "DISPICS", NTFS 3.1) Jul 25 10:05:06 caseyjones.homenet192-168-10.com ntfs-3g[1315889]: Cmdline options: rw,uhelper=udisks2,nodev,nosuid,uid=1000,gid=1001,windows_names Jul 25 10:05:06 caseyjones.homenet192-168-10.com ntfs-3g[1315889]: Mount options: uhelper=udisks2,nodev,nosuid,allow_other,nonempty,relatime,rw,default_permissions,fsname=/dev/sde2,blkdev,blksize=4096 *Jul 25 10:05:06 caseyjones.homenet192-168-10.com ntfs-3g[1315889]: Global ownership and permissions enforced, configuration type 7 Jul 25 10:05:06 caseyjones.homenet192-168-10.com udisksd[1062]: Mounted /dev/sde2 at /run/media/pgaltieri/DISPICS on behalf of uid 1000

*The**NTFS drive is automounted but the ext4 drive is not.

This is not an issue with the mate desktop since the same thing happens when I use the gnome classic desktop on F42.

Under F40 all my external USB drives were automounted.

Paolo

On 7/24/25 1:20 AM, Patrick Dupre via users wrote:
Tim:
Also, your message didn't say *how* you were auto-mounting.  AutoFS?
With or without /etc/fstab entries, etc?
Patrick Dupre:
There is nothing in /etc/fstab
As I said, it just "automount" when I plug the USB SSD (like a key).
Then most likely, that would be your desktop environment in charge of
the automounting, then.  Which one do you use?  Gnome, KDE, Mate, etc.

I'm using Fedora 42 with Mate on my other PC, and still have CentOS on
this PC (also with Mate).  And with either of them, if I plug my old
laptop drive into USB enclosure, then plug that into my system.  It
does auto-mount the old Windows partition, and the other partitions are
listed in the file explorer as things I can click on and load up, but
they're not mounted until I do that.

I don't have the option to "browse media when inserted" selected (which
is more about opening a file lister window, than mounting), on either
of them.  And temporarily enabling that, didn't make any difference.

That drive has this on it:
1st partition Fedora /boot
2nd partition Ye olde Windows Vista
3rd partition Ext3 partition

And I recall when plugging in an install ISO dd'd to a USB flash drive
with multiple partitions, one gets auto-mounted, the rest are available
to look at, but not auto-mounted.

This is what I anticipated.
I use gnome
I am going to clarify the point (see the attached picture)
Using the gnome file browser,
You can see that the 2 first partitions are mounted automatically (5.2 GB 
Volume, and the 786 MB Volume)
but not the 2 next ones (pdupre and pdupre_ext)
Of course, if I click right on them, I can mount them.
This is what I consider "auto-mounted" versus manually mounted.
This is not really an issue, just trying to understand.

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